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OWEN TEMPLE Cl) msmi | PARTY E THURSDAY, SEPT. 2 at SHADOW CANYON Opening: Houston Marchman “Passing Through” ava\\ab\e at Hastings Brought to you by Mustang Entertainment Page 12 • Tuesday, August 31,1999 Nation Detroit teachers strike eButtali' C upholders inrfudledl DETROIT (AP) — One day be fore the start of classes, Detroit’s teachers yesterday refused to extend contract talks and called a strike, de spite a state law barring them from walking out. The strike vote represented a set back for a bold attempt to reform the school system and improve Detroit’s struggling schools. The talks are the first contract ne gotiations with the teachers since Detroit’s elective school board was replaced earlier this year with one appointed by Mayor Dennis Archer. “I would have to say the rejection today does reflect an unwillingness by some teachers to engage them selves in significant change,” David Adamany, the interim chief execu tive of the 172,000-student district said. The previous contract between the Detroit Federation of Teachers and the school system expired June 30, and an extension ran out yesterday. School and union negotiators had agreed early yesterday on a new, 10- day extension while talks continued. However, thousands of teachers took a vote later in the day, rejected the extension and called a strike. Adamany said he would wait to see how many teachers reported to work today before deciding whether to hold classes. The union has not walked out since 1992. Under a 1994 Michigan law, public school employees who strike lose a day’s pay in addition to being fined a day’s pay. The law has never been tested. Union president John Elliot said he was disappointed with the vote. The issues still unresolved in cluded salary increases, merit pay, extended work days and a dress code. Teachers said merit pay was the most contentious issue. Many prefer to keep the old standards of experience, seniority and education. ‘‘I don’t understand merit pay. I think it needs a lot of explanation,” Jennifer Poole, 52, a school social worker with more than 12 years’ ex perience, said. Among those opposing the new extension was Anita Griggs, 40, who has taught elementary classes at Stell Wagen Academy for 15 years. “Once they get us in the class rooms, there’s no reason to bargain in good faith. They’ve got the labor,” Griggs said. The mayor said in a statement that he is troubled by the strike vote after all of the hard work the district had done to prepare for the school year. The appointed school board — an idea pushed by Republican Gov. John Engler and approved by the Legislature — followed decades of declining performance and alleged mismanagement and pork-barrel politics in Detroit schools. Support ers said an appointed school board would be better able to make the hard political decisions that need to be made. ‘ Fugitive’r inspiratii* ^ wife to bf"^ exhumed Wit> Killer confesses to assault FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — A motel handyman who admitted beheading a Yosemite naturalist also con fessed to sexually assaulting two teen-age sightseers before they were killed, the government said in court documents filed yesterday. Cary Stayner told the FBI he sexually assaulted Silv- ina Pelosso and Juli Sund in their room at the Cedar Lodge before killing them, according to a six-page af fidavit to support a request for bodily fluid samples. A judge ordered Stayner to comply. Stayner also led the FBI to the knives he said he used to decapitate Joie Armstrong and slash the throat of Juli Sund, the affidavit said. The weapons had dried blood and fingerprints on them. The affidavit is the first public acknowledgment by investigators that the two teen-age victims were sex ually assaulted before they and Sund’s mother, Car ole Sund, were killed. Stayner is the prime suspect but has not been charged in their deaths. Stayner, 38, has been charged with murder in the July 21 death of Armstrong, a naturalist who led out door education programs at the park. In a jailhouse interview with a television reporter, he claimed he did not sexually assault any of the women, Stayner has fought a request to give samples of his blood, hair and saliva to the FBI. Stayner lived and worked at the Cedar Lodge, the last place the three sightseers were seen alive in Feb ruary. Analysis by the FBI crime lab has yielded trace evidence including “hairs in vacuum sweepings” and “possible bodily fluid stains on a blanket seized in the room,” the affidavit said. The crime lab has also recovered two partial fin gerprints from the anonymous letter that Stayner claims to have authored and mailed to the FBI’s Modesto office in March, directing investigators to Juli Sund’s body. CLEVELAND (AP)Mild be son of Dr. Sam SMTexas /. dropped his opposition*^ ty ad if exhumation of his uBtively I. body yesterday,allow®;iypossible cutors to examine the: |to subjec of the woman whose character-, helped inspire "TheFijBitv TV series. Such a slot Prosecutors want toga ■rankly, r samples fromMarilynSI foresight . to help them defendthe di iversity the wrongful impn'sn■fesu 11u. lawsuit filed by the$lienBead, in - son, Sam Reese Sheppa: pul to sti. Sheppard spent aiieti | ac k ot pi ; prison after being cornu lobnt v. heating his wife to dealt he newly 1954. He was acquittedJhig most trial in 1966. |o\. insh The younger Sheppt tends a window washt his mother and has wo the last 10 years to try his father’s name.lthe wrongful imprisonment suit, damages could® much as $2 million. Sheppard, 52, of C Calif., is upset about humation because heteel ecutors have had 45ye, vestigate the case andvi exhumation as a lasti stalling tactic. Sheppard’s attorney, Gilbert, said the exhuns was not worth fightingoi “We feel it’s going to firm our case or not dele: much of anything, frankii said. it but also s' needs, p apathn A&M U1 new pi mester, ers of tl My, or < |i move than V\ p policy ual glut rrive tin iwill be < [Suppose ervices esday. s policy ministr; . Insteal er of fre will now f freshn Conference: Decrease in AIDS deaths slowiui Researchers question continued effectiveness of so-called drug cocktails as therapy for dm [is is ant as ever] lyees vo valuable p, io unlcai ATLANTA (AP) — The drop-off in AIDS deaths since the introduc tion of powerful drug cocktails has slowed dramatically, raising ques tions about whether the combina tion of medicines is reaching the limits of what it can do. Last year, researchers were stunned to learn that AIDS deaths nationwide dropped 42 percent from 1996 to 1997 — a drop attrib uted to the potent drug cocktails that can subdue the virus. Yesterday, however, statistics re leased at the first national confer ence on AIDS prevention showed that the decline in deaths slowed to 20 percent from 1997 to 1998, when AIDS killed 17,047 people. “As we anticipated, we are now seeing the first signs of a slowing in this trend,” Dr. Helene Gayle, direc tor of HIV prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during the National HIV Pre vention Conference. “In a period of only two years, new combination therapies cut the annual level of death in half. But for the time being it appears that much of the benefit of these new therapies has been realized.” “AIDS drugs don't work for everyone and aren't a cure for anyone." Steven Fisher AIDS Action The CDC blamed the slowdown on three factors: • Some people still are not get ting tested and treated for the AIDS virus. • Some are finding it difficult to stick the complicated regimen of pills, which must be taken at cer tain times of the day, sometimes with food, sometimes without. • Drug-resistant strains of the virus are emerging as patients fail to keep on schedule with their medicine. Officials at the CDG, which re leased the numbers, said it is still too early to tell if the current treat ments have pushed AIDS deaths as low was they can go. But one worrisome sign is that the decline in deaths last year oc curred mostly in the first three months of 1998. After that, deaths leveled off for the rest of the year. “We might continue to see that decline,” Gayle said. “But it is at least a concern that most declines were in the first quarter of 1998 and not in the last quarter.” After AIDS killed 49,351 in 1995, deaths dropped 25 percent in 1996 to 36,792. They then plummeted to 21,222 deaths in 1997, a drop of 42 percent. The numbers caused experts to toast the so-called AIDS cocktails that combine older drugs with newer medicines known as pro tease inhibitors. The drug combi nations reducegfhe level of the virus in the blood so low that it can not be measured. Some advocates pointed to the CDC’s latest numbers as proof the rthermo: lo not te fully 1 aware of potential jls of sa, drugs are, not as effective hoped. “Our worst fears have ben tragic reality,” Steven Fishet advocacy group AIDS Adior.) “AIDS drugs don’t workfoti one and aren’t a cure for an] The CDC acknowledges problems with the pill n drug-resistant strains andffi) nosed people make it harder duce deaths even more. “We have gotten thedni®aust h« to the people that know the™ trapped fected,” Gayle said. “1 thinf» r a cor>l we’ve got to do a betterjol)P or the sure we get access to treat®! yeai people who don’t know they' fected, which means people tested.” The CDC estimates many as 900,000 people it- with HIV in the United State new infections holding stei roughly 40,000 a yearfortfij decade. The latest numbers AIDS continues to kill much higher numbers racial groups. OUR CUSTOMERS TELL US EARTH ART ROCKS! CO 216 N. 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